Modern Art Auction

Modern Art Auction

PRINSEPS MODERN ART AUCTION 24-25 APRIL 2019 www.prinseps.com 1 PRINSEPS MODERN ART AUCTION www.prinseps.com Prinseps Note We are excited to bring forth our seventh auction! Prinseps has been growing the past year and we are pleased to announce that we have launched our online gallery as well. We appreciate all the support we have received and hope to continue to provide you good quality works. Prinseps has an exceptional double sided Ram Kumar from the 1960s for auction. This is particularly rare because it is abstract in front and figurative at the back. Ram Kumar was an artist that never returned to his figurative style and so this work is incredibly important. This work is also extremely rare as double sided works are essentially possible only on boards and unlikely on canvases. It belongs to the formative years of the Progressive Modern Art Auction Artists’ Group movement, what some might describe as the beginning of modernism in India, and therefore of critical importance. 24 - 25 April 2019 This auction boasts of a F.N. Souza 1948 work which was done in Goa soon after he left the J. J. School of Art. This work is a part of the Souza in the 40s exhibition. By this time the Progressive Artists’ Group had just been formed and we can see a glimpse of what they The auction is open for proxy bidding wanted to paint in a new India. Souza was one of the original PAG members and he was responsible for inviting M.F. Husain to join the group. We have a another Husain which is a Auction commences for live bidding at 10am pre-PAG work from 1944 - artworks from this time period are very rare. on 24th April and ends as per schedule from 7pm the next day We have an early 1990 Manu Parekh work which is from his Bhagalpur series where he refers to the Bhagalpur Blindings which was a mishap that occured in Bihar in 1979 and 1980. This work has been exhibited in all three NGMAs and the Kasturbhai Lalbhai Museum in India. These early works by Manu Parekh demonstrate his diverse oeuvre and highlights other works that collectors may not be familiar with. In addition, Prinseps is introducing photography to mainstream auctions for the first time with works by Jyoti Bhatt, Raghu Rai, and a photomontage by Vivan Sundaram. We have three works of bespoke furniture from the early 20th century. There are many other works of great interest and hope that there is something special for everyone! Research, Sales and Curatorial Team at Prinseps 5 Modern Art Auction 24 - 25 April 2019 6 - PRINSEPS Spring Auction Catalogue - 2019 7 NATIONAL ART TREASURE - NON EXPORTABLE 1. JAMINI ROY (1887 - 1972) Untitled (Dolls) Pen on Paper Circa 1940 7 x 11 in. ESTIMATE INR 20,000 - 50,000 PROVENANCE Private Collection Jamini Roy’s inspiration of folk art led him to experiment with sculpture along with paintings and sketches even though he had no formal sculpture training. This artwork depicts a preparatory sketch of three sculptures similar to crude dolls from folk art. The viewer can see the block of wood and how Roy has planned on removing sections to make a complete sculpture. While this doll sculpture looks different from the typical doll, it can be considered to be an altered, abstract version of it. The drawings are works on their own but his sculptures are more than just complements to his drawings. Intrigued by shadows, frontal view, silhouettes and the profile view of the sculpture, Roy uses the sketches to plan out his ideas on paper. 8 - PRINSEPS - Spring Auction Catalogue - 2019 9 NATIONAL ART TREASURE - NON EXPORTABLE 2. JAMINI ROY (1887 - 1972) Untitled (Village Women) Tempera on cardboard Circa 1940 16 x 10 in. ESTIMATE INR 50,000 - 1,00,000 PROVENANCE Estate of Jamini Roy Jamini Roy's rejection of the western academic style of painting led to him being inspired by Bengali folk paintings. Before he made the complete switch to the pat style paintings, he was depicting village life and folk. This work shows a personal reconstruction of another Indian reality that was often not seen in urban areas. Possibly an attempt to have art that could be accessible to a larger Indian audience, Roy broke away from classical traditions of art. Making his own paints, he experimented with his style and mediums. This work shows his typical hues of blue, yellows, red and browns that he made from local pigments. 10 - PRINSEPS Spring Auction Catalogue - 2019 11 NATIONAL ART TREASURE - NON EXPORTABLE 3. JAMINI ROY (1887 - 1972) Untitled (Alpana) Tempera on cloth pasted on board Circa 1930 37 x 32 in. ESTIMATE INR 18,00,000 - 22,00,000 PROVENANCE Saffronart, Febuary 2017, Lot No. 43 Jamini Roy, who was inspired by folk traditions created an Alpana or a floral motif that was considered to be sacred painting in bengal because it was done on special occasions. The alpana which is usually done with hands and a rice paint on the floor was done with tempera on cloth instead. Roy used abstraction, rejected the typical western style of painting with folk line and colour. He invented his own style which was inspired by primitivism and with stronger colours, simplification and pattern. This alpana is an indigenous inspired abstraction of a landscape in Bengal. As this was done in the 1930s, he was far ahead of his peers in his contibution to modern art in India. 12 - PRINSEPS Spring Auction Catalogue - 2019 13 4. BIREN DE (1926 - 2011) Untitled (Tantra) Signed and dated lower left Oil on canvas 1967 24 x 18 in. ESTIMATE INR 8,00,000 - 12,00,000 PROVENANCE Originally acquired from Dhoomimal Art Gallery PUBLISHED Past Present into the Future Contemporary India Art , Page no. 20, December 2007. Known for his Neo-Tantric paintings, Biren De moulded an artistic career for himself across five decades, beginning as a portrait painter. The early works were figurative and strongly influenced by Post-Impressionist European painters. He gradually evolved into abstraction and by the sixties had abandoned figuration altogether, developing what became known as his signature ‘Neo-tantric’ style. His tantric style works show symmetrical patterns of geometry, concentric rings, crescents and orbs. The presence of tantric symbols such as the mandala, phallus and vagina which represent the masculine and feminine energies of the universe. De’s tantric works often had dark blues and bright reds which was meant to awaken the psyche towards an undivided consciousness. 14 - PRINSEPS Spring Auction Catalogue - 2019 15 5. BIMAL DASGUPTA (1917 - 1995) Untitled (Landscape) Signed and dated lower right Oil on canvas 1989 48 x 36 in. ESTIMATE INR 4,00,000 - 6,00,000 PUBLISHED Trends and tradition, Page No. 181 EXHIBITED Bimal Das Gupta retrospective, Lalit Kala Academi, 1990 Bimal Dasgupta spent his childhood in Behrampur in Bengal. After completing his art education from the Government College of Arts and Crafts, Calcutta, and he embarked on a career as a landscape artist. Bimal Dasgupta’s paintings present variations on the theme of petals. He painted landscapes that showed his appreciation for nature and colours. Although he was primarily interested in watercolours; he also experimented with acrylic paint and oil as well. However, his preferred medium remained watercolour after he found out that he was allergic to turpentine. Using an array of realistic images as well as completely abstract forms, Dasgupta used textural changes and bright colour schemes, making his landscapes come alive with shifting shapes and barely visible forms. 16 - PRINSEPS Spring Auction Catalogue - 2019 17 Etchings : Somnath Hore’s Pictorial Language Born in 1921 in Chittagong, undivided India, Somnath Hore studied at the Government Art College in Calcutta. His works represent the turbulent lives at the time of the Bengal Famine of 1943. His pictorial language in his sketches, sculptures and prints is a reaction to one of the major crises that hit Bengal in the 20th century. Somnath Hore’s art practice was western and academic in style. He was interested in humanist themes, and his works often involved the world of painting and printmaking with sculptural, textural prints that resonated with his feelings of anger and pain. His subject matter drew attention to the life of people in Bengal; the impoverished and suffering social class represented the pain caused from the Famine of 1943. The subject matter was used to arouse patriotic fervour when the british used their scorched earth policy during World War II. Viscosity print In 1958, Somnath Hore moved to Delhi to join the Delhi Polytechnic. He experimented and analysed different methods of printmaking such as wood engraving, etching, lithograph and dry point to negotiate with his political image making. His prints started gaining attention and prominence across the country and was referred by his contemporaries in the cultural field. At the peak of his artistic progress, Somnath Hore left Delhi and moved back to Calcutta. Erotic etchings In 1969, he moved to Santiniketan and joined the Printmaking Department at Kala Bhavan. It was dur this time that Calcutta was going through a political and social upheaval and Hore was disturbed by the conflict. His works gradually became more cerebral and his subjects more universally emotive. It is here in Santiniketan, that Somnath Hore developed his pulp print technique with the Wound series. The meditative white on white surface texture of cuts and peels, of skinned and bruised, intensified the core expression of pain and suffering which he advocated throughout his life. The icon represented the helpless, deserted, starved and tortured people that he saw during the communal riots and Bengal famine.

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